Penguin activities

I have been focused on teaching my kids about polar animals this winter. After we did our recent Arctic animals unit, I decided it was time to turn our attention to the most famous animals of the Antarctic: penguins! I planned a series of penguin activities to teach several lessons about these adorable animals. I also used my kids’ interest in penguins to teach some basic math skills. This post shares all of the penguin-related activities we did on a recent morning.

The kids loved watching the videos, and together we talked a lot about how the penguins keep the eggs and baby chicks on their feet and under their tummies to keep them warm. The kids were so fascinated by this.

I explained to the kids that the penguins were feeling very cold because they were not huddled together, and the goal of the game was to gather all the penguins as fast as possible to huddle them together again. The kids loved scrambling around the room to pick up the penguins.

And then they huddled them together to help them stay warm.

Next, we played a penguin math game. I gathered all of the penguins and put them into a pot.

They had to count the number on the dice and then take that many penguins out of the pot to put into their pile.

When there we no more penguins in the pot, we counted up the number in each kids’ pile.

I decided to use this as a lesson in understanding quantity. We talked about which kid had more penguins than the other. To make the lesson concrete, we lined up their penguins so we could visually compare which line was longer and had more penguins than the other. QBoy was able to see, in the case of the picture below, that his line had two more penguins than XGirl’s line.

Then we tried another activity to simulate how the penguins hold their eggs on their feet and tucked under their bellies. Using a belt and a small pillow, I fashioned a big tummy for both kids.

Then I had them stand with their feet together while I put a “penguin egg” on their feet.

Then I asked them to walk across the room without dropping the egg. Well, it turns out that was pretty much impossible! I tried it as well and I could not keep the darn bean bag egg on my feet! But we were all laughing so hard that it didn’t matter. 🙂

After doing these activities, QBoy really got into the idea that he was a penguin who had to protect his baby penguins from the cold. He did not want to take off his pillow tummy, but instead wanted to use to take care of his “baby penguins” to keep them from getting cold. He spent half of the morning carrying around his baby penguins like this:

Finally, both kids did some work on individual skills. QBoy did a few penguin-related math exercises. The first was this Penguin Subtraction worksheet from my Winter Printable Pack.

This next activity was supposed to have been done using the small penguins we had, but QBoy was still playing the role of daddy penguin and did not want to put them down as he didn’t want them to freeze. So we used polar bears instead. Using this worksheet I developed, QBoy had to recognize the number in each box of the equation, put that number of polar bears in each box, and then count the total and put that number of polar bears in the total box.

So many great penguin activities. I had to laugh about the penguin eggs! We did the same activity in storytime and I couldn’t keep the beanbag on my feet either. It made all the kids laugh and I just said, “Hey, this is REALLY hard!”

Ohhhhh, perfect post! My daycare kids are going to LOVE these activities. Thank you so much, I was wondering what I was going to do this week 🙂
Have you read the “Tacky the Penguin” books? They are hilarious! Tacky is this unique bird who does everything his own comical way. He makes me smile everytime I read them. Thanks for the amazon dice link, I’ve been looking for one of these dice for awhile now.

I hope your daycare kids enjoy these activities as much as my kids did! And I have heard of the Tacky the penguin books, but we haven’t read them. I think I am going to have invest in some before we revisit learning about penguins next winter. Thanks for the recommendation!

So glad I found your post featured at Life with Moore Babies on the Mom’s Library link-up. This is such a cute post – I pinned it! I am loving the pillows with the penguin egg exercise! How wonderful 🙂

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